Quotes about Comfort
Your King rules over everything that would discourage and disappoint you, and he rules for your good and his glory. What is out of your control is under his rule.
— Paul David Tripp
You never have to feel or act as if you're alone in your suffering, because the One who sits on the throne at the right hand of the Father not only faced all the things that you now face, but he also faced the myriad of temptations that you and every other sufferer faces.
— Paul David Tripp
The first of these comforts is the stunningly encouraging comfort of God's amazing grace.
— Paul David Tripp
We would rather be comfortable than to hold people accountable. We swindle ourselves into thinking that things are better than they are, and in so doing we compromise the calling and standards of the God we say we love and serve.
— Paul David Tripp
The church is a community of unfinished people living in a broken world and still in need of God's forgiving and transforming grace. The church isn't meant, for either leaders or those being led, to be comfortable; it's meant to be personally transformational.
— Paul David Tripp
God is with you in your moments of darkness because he will never leave you.
— Paul David Tripp
First, God is not shocked or surprised that you are discouraged
— Paul David Tripp
In moments when you wish you knew what you can't know, there is rest to be found. There is One who knows.
— Paul David Tripp
No, trials expose what we have always been. Trials bare things to which we would have otherwise been blind. So, too, the teen years expose our self-righteousness, our impatience, our unforgiving spirit, our lack of servant love, the weakness of our faith, and our craving for comfort and ease.
— Paul David Tripp
In moments when you wish you knew what you can't know, there is rest to be found. There is One who knows. He loves you and rules what you don't understand with your good in mind.
— Paul David Tripp
Scripture never looks down on the sufferer, it never mocks his pain, it never turns a deaf ear to his cries, and it never condemns him for his struggle. It presents to the sufferer a God who understands, who cares, who invites us to come to him for help, and who promises one day to end all suffering of any kind once and forever. Because of this, the Bible, while being dramatically honest about suffering, is at the same time gloriously hopeful.
— Paul David Tripp
Our agenda, our definition of what a good God should give us, is a life that is comfortable, pleasurable, and predictable; one in which there's lots of human affirmation and an absence of suffering. But consider God's agenda,
— Paul David Tripp